U.S. Official Vows More Karabakh Efforts In 2007

U.S. OFFICIAL VOWS MORE KARABAKH EFFORTS IN 2007
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
Dec 26 2006

International mediators will continue to press for a peaceful
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh next year despite parliamentary
elections in Armenia, a senior U.S. administration official was
reported to say late Monday.

In an interview with the Armenian Mediamax news agency, Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza said the failure by Armenia
and Azerbaijan to strike a peace deal in 2006 did not shut a rare
"window of opportunity" in the protracted negotiating process.

"The co-chairs [of the OSCE Minsk Group] will continue to work with the
two sides, even as campaign season begins for the 2007 parliamentary
elections in Armenia," Bryza was quoted as saying. "We will work
together quietly, but we hope to continue making progress on the
details of the basic principles that the two sides still need to
agree upon."

Bryza, who co-chairs the Minsk Group together with senior French and
Russian diplomats, insisted last July that the 2007 polls as well
presidential ballots due in both Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2008 are
not an insurmountable obstacle to peace. He argued that the ruling
regimes in Yerevan and Baku could actually win votes if they find a
mutually acceptable solution to the dispute.

"I would argue that the elections in Armenia and Azerbaijan don’t
pose an obstacle to reaching an agreement," Bryza told RFE/RL in an
interview. "They just pose an additional complicating factor … If
the presidents succeed, with our help as mediators, in finalizing
and eliminating the final differences with regard to this framework
agreement, and if they come up with an agreement that’s mutually
acceptable, that should be a plus in an election.

"That’s a huge achievement that should actually help political leaders
and their parties to win votes."

However, President Robert Kocharian announced on December 15 that
he will not sign any peace accords with Azerbaijan before the May
elections, saying that his political opponents would exploit any
settlement proposed by the mediators. "Before the elections to the
National Assembly, there will be no active negotiating process,"
he said.

Kocharian’s foreign minister, Vartan Oskanian, clarified afterwards
that this does not mean the peace process will be put on hold.

"Perhaps there will be fewer meetings with less publicity," said
Oskanian. "But I think negotiations on the content [of Minsk Group
proposals] will continue."